Background of the Invention
Field of the Invention
[0001] This invention relates to films and coatings having anisotropic conductive pathways
therein, and to methods for making the films and coatings, and to electronic components
having such a coating thereon. The invention is particularly for use in interconnection
technology in the electronics industry.
Description of Related Art
[0002] Electronic components such as semiconductor chips, circuit boards, flex connectors
and displays often have very small connectors such as pad, pins and leads and have
minimal gaps (pitch) between connectors. Conventional solder may give rise to difficulties
because the solder may bridge the gap between two adjacent connectors on the same
component. Therefore anisotropically-conductive adhesives have been proposed for electrical
interconnection. An anisotropically conductive adhesive (ACA) conducts electricity
in one direction only (usually denoted as the Z direction) and should eliminate conduction
in the plane perpendicular thereto (the X and Y directions).
[0003] Various proposals for ACA's are reviewed by Ogunjimi
et al in Journal of Electronics Manufacturing (1992)
2, 109 - 118 and are described in U.S. Patent 4740657 Tsukagoshi
et al; 3,359,145 Salyer
et al; 4,548,862 Hartman; 4,644,101 Jin
et al; 4,170,677 Hutcheson and 4,737,112 Jin
et al.
[0004] Jin
et al in IEEF Trans. on Components, Hybrids and Manufacturing Technology, Vol. 16, (8),
1993, p. 972 (the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference) describes
anisotropically conductive films consisting of a single layer of magnetically separated
conductor spheres in a polymer matrix. In a vertical magnetic field, ferromagnetic
spheres in a viscous medium become parallel magnetic dipoles, and repel one another
to produce a two-dimensional particle distribution which is described as uniform.
This structure is then frozen in by cooling or curing of the polymer matrix, which
may be an elastomer or an epoxy or thermoplastic adhesive.
[0005] ACAs rendered anisotropic by application of a magnetic field have not been adopted
commercially, so far as the present Applicants are aware. The proposals by Jin
et al (which date back to 1986, as shown by US Patent 4 737 112) require specialized particles
which are both magnetic and electrically conductive. Magnetic particles which have
been distributed by a magnetic field may form undesirable dendritic protrusions, which
can only be circumvented by balancing magnetic force on the particles with surface
tension of the polymer and gravity effects. Such dendritic structures are undesirable
for interconnection in the electronics field, where the distribution of conductive
pathways is critical. Ordering magnetic particles in a regular adhesive matrix therefore
imposes restraints with regard to particle type (ferromagnetic), field strength and
matrix properties. Ferromagnetic conductive particles such as Fe, Ni, and Co tend
to have high densities, low compressibility, are prone to settling out of formulations
and are either toxic or easily corroded. It is therefore undesirable to use them as
interconnection particles.
[0006] Hogerton in Journal of Electronics Manufacturing (1993) 3, 191-197 (the contents
of which are incorporated herein by reference) discusses the status of 3M's adhesive
interconnection technology, with particular emphasis on anisotropically conductive
adhesive films. Hogerton indicates that a new film construction will avoid the inherent
limitations of random dispersion of conductive particles and will provide for direct
adhesive flip-chip attachment of unbumped integrated circuits. However the new film
construction is not disclosed.
[0007] In an unrelated area of technology, it is known to make a magnetic liquid or "ferrofluid"
consisting of a colloidal suspension of minute ferromagnetic particles in a non-magnetic
carrier liquid. A typical ferrofluid may consist of magnetite particles (Fe
30
4) having a particle size in the range 2 nanometres to 0.1 micrometres (and a mean
size of about 0.01 micrometres) in kerosene as carrier liquid with a surfactant to
prevent agglomeration of the particles (see Skjeltorp "One- and Two-Dimensional Crystallization
of Magnetic Holes" in Physical Review Letters, Volume 51, Number 25, 19 December 1983,
2306-2309, Skjeltrop A.T. and Helgesen, G. Phyisica A, 176, 37, 1991; Skjeltrop A.T.
J. Appl. Physics 57(1), 3285, 1985); and US Patent 4 846 988 Skjeltrop, the contents
of which are incorporated by reference.
[0008] U.S. Patent 5,075 034 Wanthal describes a two component adhesive composition which
is curable by induction heating (i.e. with an induced magnetic field) and which contains
conductive carbon black along with iron oxide particles. However there is no suggestion
that the iron oxide particles may be of such small particle size as to form a colloidal
suspension. This patent therefore does not relate to the field of ferrofluids or of
anisotropically conductive adhesives.
[0009] EP 0 208 391 A2 Ferrofluidics Corporation describes an electrically conductive ferrofluid
composition which contains carbon particles having diameters of about 5 to 30nm. The
composition is intended for use in a ferrofluid exclusion seal apparatus for sealing
of computer disk drive spindles.
[0010] JP 3095 298 Nippon Seiko KK describes a magnetic fluid composition containing fine
ferromagnetic particles and fine particles of at least one metal, alloy or electrically
conductive ceramic as a material which imparts electrical conductivity. The conductive
particles have a diameter distributed within the range of a few nm to a few hundred
nm while in the case of anisotropic particles the length of the longer particles may
be a few tens of nm.
[0011] In a further unrelated area of technology, U.S. Patent No. 4,946,613 Ishikawa describes
a photosetting ferrofluid for use in magnetic flaw detection or for visualizing magnetically
recorded patterns. The photosetting ferrofluid comprises a carrier, a ferrofluid in
which the ferromagnetic particles have an adsorbed surfactant (or the surfactant is
dispersed in the carrier) and a photosetting resin. The photosetting resin may be
the carrier. The ferrofluid is applied to a surface to be analyzed and is then subjected
to a magnetic field. The applied ferrofluid will be attracted to the portion where
the magnetic flux leaks i.e. to cracks or defects in the surface, and will swell to
form a pattern corresponding to the configuration of the defect portion. A beam of
light is then used to set or harden the photosetting resin so as to fix the defect
pattern thus formed.
[0012] Ishikawa does not envisage the application of a magnetic field to create a
chosen alignment of particles, followed by fixation of this alignment.
[0013] In International Patent Publication No. WO 95/20820 (EP-A-0 692 137; hereafter called
"the parent application", the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference)
published after the priority date of this application, we have described a composition
comprising: (i) a ferrofluid comprising a colloidal suspension of ferromagnetic particles
in a non-magnetic carrier liquid, and (ii) a plurality of electrically-conductive
particles having substantially uniform sizes and shapes, dispersed in the ferrofluid.
[0014] Preferably the average particle size of the electrically conductive particles is
at least 10 times (and more particularly 100 times, most preferably 500 times) that
of the colloidal ferromagnetic particles. The non-magnetic carrier liquid may be curable
or non-curable and may be selected from:
(i) a curable liquid composition,
(ii) a mixture of a curable liquid composition and a liquid carrier in which the ferromagnetic
particles have been suspended, and
(iii) a non-curable carrier liquid,
but if the carrier liquid is non-curable and the curable liquid composition is not
present, the electrically-conductive particles have a latent adhesive property.
[0015] In the parent application we have also described a method of making an anisotropically-conductive
bond between two sets of conductors, comprising :
(a) applying to one set of conductors a layer of an adhesive composition comprising
a curable composition as described above;
(b) bringing a second set of conductors against the layer of adhesive composition;
(c) exposing the layer of adhesive composition to a substantially uniform magnetic
field such that interaction between the ferrofluid and the electrically-conductive
particles causes the electrically-conductive particles to form a regular pattern of
particles each in electrical contact with an adjacent particle and/or with a conductor
in one or both sets whereby conductive pathways are provided from one set of conductors
to the other set, each pathway comprising one or more of the electrically-conductive
particles; and
(d) curing the composition to lock the pattern in position and to bond the conductors.
[0016] The parent application further describes a method of making an anisotropically conductive
bond between two sets of conductors, comprising:
(a) applying to one set of conductors a layer of a non-curable composition as described
above wherein the electrically-conductive particles have a latent adhesive property;
(b) bringing a second set of conductors against the layer of the composition;
(c) exposing the layer of the composition to a substantially uniform magnetic field
such that interaction between the ferrofluid and the electrically-conductive particles
causes the electrically-conductive particles to form a regular pattern of particles
each in contact with an adjacent particle and/or with a conductor of one or both sets;
and
(d) activating the latent adhesive property of the particles whereby conductive pathways
are provided from one set of conductors to the other set, each pathway comprising
one or more of the electrically-conductive particles, and the conductors are bonded
by the particles.
[0017] In a preferred feature of the invention of the parent application, pressure is applied
to urge the respective sets of conductors towards one another before and/or during
the curing step or the activation of the latent adhesive property.
Summary of the Invention
[0018] It may not always be convenient to install a means for creating a magnetic field
at the location of assembly of two sets of conductors. It is therefore an object of
the present invention to provide other ways of achieving the benefits of the invention
of the parent application. It is a further object of the invention to provide films
or coatings which overcome the limitations of random dispersion of conductive particles,
as discussed in the Hogerton paper cited above, and which do not have the disadvantages
of the Jin
et al technology using magnetically separated conductor spheres.
[0019] The present invention provides an anisotropically-conductive film or a substrate
having a surface coated with an anisotropically-conductive coating, said film or coating
being formed by solidifying a composition comprising:
(i) a solidifiable ferrofluid composition, the ferrofluid comprising a colloidal suspension
of ferromagnetic particles in a non-magnetic carrier, and
(ii) a plurality of electrically-conductive particles, dispersed in the ferrofluid,
said electrically-conductive particles having been arrayed in a non-random pattern
by application of a substantially uniform magnetic field to the composition in a liquid
state and having been locked in position by solidification of the composition.
[0020] Furthermore, the present invention provides a solid-form anisotropically-conductive
or a substrate having a surface coated with a solid-form anisotropically-conductive
coating, said film or coating comprising a composition containing colloidal ferromagnetic
particles and a plurality of electrically-conductive particles arrayed in a non-random
pattern.
[0021] The present invention provides either a film as defined above, or a substrate having
a surface coated with a coating as defined above, as a stock material or article of
manufacture. The term "film or coating" used herein means a film or coating which
is formed so as to have at least one accessible major surface. This surface can be
applied against an electronic component to achieve electrical interconnection. The
accessible surface may be protected by a removable release sheet or cover sheet. The
film may suitably be in sheet form or roll form. The term "film or coating" does not
cover a layer which is formed
in situ between two conductors to bond them together, as described in the parent application.
[0022] The term "ferromagnetic" as used herein includes ferrimagnetic materials such as
ferrites.
[0023] The non-magnetic carrier liquid may suitably be solidifiable or non-solidifiable.
The term "solidifiable" as used herein means capable of existing as a solid at ambient
temperatures e.g. temperatures less than 40°C, more usually 20-30°C. Solidifiable
compositions include curable compositions which cure to solid form by exposure to
an energy source e.g. heat treatment, electromagnetic radiation, or otherwise, hardenable
compositions, compositions which solidify as a result of solvent evaporation, and
thermoplastic compositions which are heat-softenable but which revert to solid form
on cooling. The word "solid" as used herein means stable in shape and includes a gel
or polymer network. Preferably the composition is curable and it includes a primary
cure system and/or a secondary cure system.
[0024] The invention also provides a method of forming an anisotropically-conductive film
or substrate coating which comprises:
(a) applying to a substrate, a layer of a composition comprising:
(i) a solidifiable ferrofluid composition, the ferrofluid comprising a colloidal suspension
of ferromagnetic particles in a non-magnetic carrier liquid, and
(ii) a plurality of electrically-conductive particles dispersed in the ferrofluid,
(b) exposing the liquid composition to a magnetic field to array the electrically-conductive
particles in a non-random pattern, and
(c) concurrent with or subsequent to step (b), exposing the composition to solidifying
conditions for the composition, and
(d) optionally removing the layer of solid composition from the substrate to form
a film.
[0025] The non-magnetic carrier may be solid at room temperature but may be heated during
application to the substrate and/or exposure to the magnetic field.
[0026] In one embodiment the film or coating may not be required to have adhesive properties,
if for example it is to be used between two sets of conductors which are to be assembled
temporarily for test purposes but which are not to be bonded. However generally it
is preferred that the composition contains a secondary or latent adhesive/cure system,
the secondary or latent adhesive/cure system being activatable in end-use application
of the film or coating.
[0027] The exercise of the present invention generally involves two stages, an A-stage and
a B-stage. The A-stage, or primary solidification has the function of locking the
array of electrically conductive particles in position and producing a film or coating
which is capable of being handled, either when unsupported or at least when supported.
The A-stage may suitably involve a primary cure e.g. by photocure, heat, or E-beam.
Solvent evaporation, cooling (in particular from a melt), chemical reaction (e.g.
polymerization), physical assocation phenomena etc., are also acceptable means of
effecting viscosity increases to an effectively solid A-staged condition following
ordering in an initial fluid state. The B-stage which occurs during end-use application
of the film or coating, may utilize thermoplastic properties of the A-staged film
or coating but preferably involves a cure, for example to a thermoset condition. When
the A-stage solidification has been effected by a primary cure, the B-stage cure is
a secondary cure which may utilize the same or a different cure system from that of
the A-stage.
[0028] In one embodiment of the invention, the composition is applied to the substrate,
and is then exposed to the magnetic field. In another embodiment of the invention,
the composition is exposed to the magnetic field while the composition is being applied
to the substrate. The composition may be applied continuously or step-wise. Likewise
the substrate may pass continuously or step-wise pass the apparatus applying the magnetic
field.
[0029] In one embodiment the composition is applied to the substrate by stenciling or screen
printing using stenciling or screen printing equipment having one or more magnets
mounted appropriately on it.
[0030] The substrate may be rigid or flexible. A release layer may form the substrate and/or
may be applied to the layer of composition on the face remote from the substrate.
The release layer may be rigid or flexible.
[0031] The present invention includes a substrate, preferably an active or passive electronic
component, having conductors on its surface or periphery and having a coating as described
above applied to its conductors.
[0032] According to one aspect of the invention, the coating may be applied to an electronic
component, more particularly a silicon wafer, as the substrate. The base wafer with
metallized patterns delineated thereon is coated with a composition as described above,
particularly an epoxy coating which can be rendered dry to the touch. The electrically-conductive
particles are arrayed in a regular pattern by exposure to a uniform magnetic field
and the coating is cured (primary cure). Alternatively a preformed "patch" of film
according to the invention is applied to the wafer. In either case, the composition
contains a latent thermal hardener so that it has latent adhesive properties. The
resulting product, when subdivided into chips, can be used for "flip chip" attachment.
[0033] Preferably the average particle size of the electrically -conductive particles is
at least 10 times that of the colloidal-size ferromagnetic particles, more particularly
at least 100 times, most preferably at least 500 times. Most suitably the electrically
-conductive particles have an average particle size (measured on the minor dimension
in the case of non-symmetrical particles) of at least 2 micrometres while the colloidal
ferromagnetic particles have an average particle size not greater than 0.1 micrometres,
more preferably of the order of 0.01 micrometres.
[0034] The interconnection pads generally have a width in the range of 10 to 500 micrometres,
particularly of the order of 100 micrometres. The separation between the pads generally
is less than 150 micrometres, particularly of the order of 100 micrometres. However
it is aimed to reduce the separation below 100 micrometres, even down to 10 micrometres
or less. The present invention facilitates such pitch or separation reduction.
[0035] In the preferred embodiments, the electrically-conductive particles are arrayed in
a regular pattern in a monolayer.
[0036] Preferably the electrically-conductive particles have substantially uniform sizes
and shapes. Substantial uniformity is not affected by the presence of some smaller
than average particles (which may not function as conductive particles in the film)
or some larger than average particles (which may be compressible and/or otherwise
capable of size reduction in the conditions of production of the film or coating e.g.
solder particles which may or deform). The size distribution for solder powder particles
is defined according to test methods of the Institute for Interconnecting and Packaging
Electronic Circuits, Lincolnwood, Il. 60646-1705, U.S.A.. For example, under their
test method IPC-TM-650, the following distributions are quoted:
TABLE 2B
% of Sample by Weight - Nominal Size in micrometres |
|
None Larger Than |
Less than 1% Larger Than |
90% Minimum Between |
10% Maximum Less Than 1 |
Type 4 |
40 |
38 |
38-20 |
20 |
Type 5 |
30 |
25 |
25-15 |
15 |
Type 6 |
20 |
15 |
15-5 |
5 |
[0037] The term "solidifiable ferrofluid composition" used herein includes:
(1) a colloidal dispersion of ferromagnetic particles in a solidifiable liquid composition
(i.e the solidifiable composition acts as the carrier of the ferrofluid), or
(2) a mixture of a solidifiable liquid composition and a colloidal dispersion of ferromagnetic
particles in a liquid carrier.
[0038] Preferably in the above-described methods the composition is cured or otherwise solidified
while the magnetic field is applied or shortly after removal from the field.
[0039] In one feature of the invention, pressure may be applied to the layer of composition
before and/or during the primary curing or other solidification step.
[0040] According to another preferred feature of the present invention, the thickness of
the film or coating is substantially equal to or slightly less than the average diameter
of the electrically-conductive particles. During exposure to the magnetic field, the
thickness of the layer of composition may suitably be greater than the average diameter
of the electrically-conductive particles, preferably not more than twice the said
average diameter, so that each particle is surrounded by the carrier liquid and is
free to move in the layer of the composition. After the particles have been ordered
by the magnetic field, pressure may be applied to the layer of the composition to
reduce the thickness so that the electrically-conductive particles lie at or protrude
slightly from both surfaces of the film or coating. Alternatively, if compression
is omitted, the thickness of the layer of composition may be reduced by shrinkage
during the A-stage, e.g. as a result of cure or drying. If the particles are compressible
spheres, the thickness of the film or coating may be reduced by compression to less
than the average diameter of the electrically-conductive particles so that the particles
are compressed into a non-circular cross-sectional shape and the area of electrical
contact on the surface of each particle is increased. Compression of individual particles
to different degrees of compression may also compensate for some variations in particle
size and flatness of the substrates. Electrically-conductive particles having a core
of polymeric material coated with an electrically-conductive metal will have a degree
of compressibility dependent upon the extent of cross-linking of the polymer. Gold-coated
spherical polystyrene particles supplied by Sekisui Fine Chemical Co, Osaka, Japan
under the name AU 212, (which were found to have an average diameter of 11.5 micrometres)
compressed on the Z-axis under 3.3 MPa pressure were found to have a Z-axis dimension
of 10.5 micrometres i.e. an aspect ratio (Z/X) of 0.79 corresponding to an 8.7% contraction
on the Z-axis.
[0041] In one embodiment, the magnetic field is applied normal to the layer of the composition
(i.e. in the Z direction) and the electrically-conductive particles form a regular
array of particles in a monolayer or in columns, depending on the thickness of the
layer. With a monolayer there is primarily single-particle bridging in the Z direction
between two sets of conductors (when the film or coating is used between two sets
of conductors). The regular pattern improves the reliability of electrical contact.
In a second embodiment the magnetic field is applied parallel to the layer of the
composition (i.e. the X direction) and the electrically-conductive particles form
parallel chains of particles, each in electrical contact with an adjacent particle
or particles of the same chain. The chains are formed to lie parallel to the longitudinal
axis of two sets of conductor pins or tracks. Here again, single-particle bridging
in the Z-direction is achieved between the two sets of conductors but the particles
are also in electrical contact with adjacent particles in the same chain so that reliability
is further improved. In a case where two separate sets of conductor pins or tracks
are located on opposite edges of an integrated circuit or other component, the layer
of the composition will normally be interrupted at a central area of the component
so that no conductive chain of particles extends across the width of the component
to connect the two sets of conductors on the same component (unless in a special case
this is desired). In the case of a "quad" component having conductor pins on four
edges, with two sets at right angles to the other two sets, the layer of the composition
is applied, exposed to the magnetic field and cured or activated in two steps, so
that chains of conductive particles are formed in the X-direction and Y-direction
with the appropriate alignments and interruptions in the respective areas.
[0042] With the embodiment which uses a magnetic field normal to the layer of the composition,
no significant alignment in the X-direction or Y-direction occurs, so that no interruption
of the layer of the composition or double alignment step is needed.
[0043] The colloidal ferromagnetic particles of the ferrofluid are preferably magnetite
but other ferromagnetic particles may also be used as described in U.S. Patent 4,946,613
Ishikawa the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. Exemplary ferromagnetic
particles include: (i) ferromagnetic oxides such as manganese ferrites other than
magnetite, cobalt ferrites, barium ferrites, metallic composite ferrites (preferably
selected from zinc, nickel and mixtures thereof), and mixtures thereof; and (ii) ferromagnetic
metals selected from iron, cobalt, rare earth metals and mixtures thereof. A ferrite
is a ceramic iron oxide compound having ferromagnetic properties with a general formula
NFe
2O
4 where M is generally a metal such as cobalt, nickel or zinc (Chambers Science and
Technology Dictionary, W.R. Chambers Ltd. and Cambridge University Press, England,
1988). The phenomenon of ferrimagnetism is observed in ferrites and similar materials.
However they are included within the definition of ferromagnetic particles in this
and the parent application.
[0044] The ferromagnetic particle diameter may be in the range 2 nanometres to 0.1 micrometres,
preferably with a mean particle size of about 0.01 micrometres. The ferromagnetic
particle content may suitably comprise from 1 to 30% by volume of the curable ferrofluid
adhesive composition. In the case where a monomer forms the carrier of the ferrofluid,
the suspension of ferromagnetic particles in the monomer may suitably have a particle
content of 2-10% by volume.
[0045] A surfactant will generally be required for stably dispersing the ferromagnetic particles
in the carrier. Surfactants may be selected from unsaturated fatty acids and salts
thereof wherein the fatty acid or salt has one or more polar groups such as COOH,
SO
3H, PO
3H and mixtures thereof, or other surfactants well known in the art such as silicone
type surfactants, fluorine type surfactants and the like. Suitable surfactants include
Sodium oleate, or oleic acid, silane coupling agents such as that available under
the Trade Mark SH-6040 from Toray Silicone Co. Ltd., Saloosinate LH from Nikko Chem.
Co. Ltd, the fluorine containing surfactant X C95 - 470 from Toshiba Silicone Co.
Ltd.. Primary surfactants form an adsorbed coating on the surface of the ferromagnetic
particles. In some circumstances a secondary surfactant may also be required, to achieve
satisfactory dispersion, particularly an anionic surfactant, for example an acid form
of a phosphate ester, particularly an aromatic phosphate ester type surfactant such
as GAFAC RE610 from GAF (Great Britain) Limited, Wythenshawe, Manchester, U.K. or
RHODAFAC RE610 from Rhone-Poulenc Chimie, France.
[0046] A suitable non-magnetic carrier liquid may be chosen from among those described in
U.S. Patent 4,946,613 Ishikawa, U.S. Patent 3843540 Reimers or W0 95/20820 of the
present Applicants, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. The
carrier may suitably be an organic soluent selected from (a) hydrocarbons such as
liquid fractions of intermediate boiling range such as kerosene and fuel oils, n-pentane,
cyclohexane, petroleum ether, petroleum benzine, benzene, xylene, toluene and mixtures
thereof; (b) halogenated hydrocarbons such as chlorobenzene, dichlorobenzene, bromobenzene
and mixtures thereof; (c) alcohols such as methanol, ethanol, n-propanol, n-butanol,
isobutanol, benzylalcohol and mixtures thereof; (d) ethers such as diethyl ether,
diisopropyl ether and mixtures thereof; (e) aldehydes such as furfural and mixtures
thereof; (f) ketones such as acetone, ethyl methyl ketone and mixtures thereof; (g)
fatty acid such as acetic acid, acetic anhydride and mixtures thereof and derivatives
thereof; and (h) phenols, as well as mixtures of the various solvents. Reviews on
ferrofluids have been provided by various authors (Ferromagnetic Materials, Wohlfarth
E.P. (Ed), Vol 2 Chpt 8, p509 - Charles S.W. and Popplewell J., North Holland Publishing
Co. 1980; Aggregation Processes in Solution, Wyn-Jones E., Gormally, J. Chpt 18, p509,
Martinet A Elsevier Sci. Publishing Co. 1983; Rosensweig R.E. Ann. Rev. Fluid Mech.
19, 437-463, 1987). Commercially available ferrofluids such as those from Ferrofluidics
Corp. NH, USA comprise dispersed magnetizable particles in suitable carriers, the
most common of which are water, esters, flurocarbons, polyphenylethers and hydrocarbons.
[0047] Typical properties of standard ferrofluids and further characteristics of exemplary
ferrofluids are given in the parent application.
[0048] The ferrofluids are normally effective insulators. The resistivity of a ferrofluid
adhesive composition is likely to be further increased after curing.
[0049] The solidifiable composition is preferably an adhesive composition and may be any
suitable monomer composition into which the ferrofluid can be mixed or in which the
colloidal magnetic particles can be dispersed. Numerous polymerizable systems based
on acrylate, epoxide, siloxane, styryloxy, vinyl ether and other monomers, oligomers,
prepolymers such as polyimides and cyanate ester resins and/or polymers and hybrids
thereof may be used. Traditional anisotropically conductive adhesive films have for
example been described by Emori and Tasaka in WO 93/01248 based on cyanate ester resins
in conjunction with thermoplastic resin additives. The adhesive may be selected from
olefinically unsaturated systems such as acrylates, methacrylates, styrene, maleate
esters, fumarate esters, unsaturated polyester resins, alkyl resins, thiol-ene compositions,
and acrylate, methacrylate, or vinyl terminated resins including silicones and urethanes.
Suitable acrylates and methacrylates are those used in polymerizable systems such
as disclosed in U.S. Patent 4963220 of Bachmann
et al and U.S. Patent 4215209 of Ray-Chaudhuri
et al. Also preferred are methylmethacrylate, polyfunctional methacrylates, silicone diacrylates
and polyfunctional acrylated urethanes of the type known to be useful in formulating
adhesives (e.g. as disclosed in U.S. Patent 4092376 of Douek
et al or a thiol-ene (e.g. as disclosed in U.S. Patent 3661744, 3898349, 4008341 or 4808638).
Suitable epoxy systems are included among those described in "Chemistry and Technology
of Epoxy Resins", ed. B. Ellis, Blackie Academic and Professional, 1993, London, Chapter
7 P.206ff. F. T Shaw. Suitable Styryloxy systems are as disclosed in U.S. Patents
5543 397, 5 084 490 and 5 141 970. The contents of all the above-mentioned patents
and text are incorporated herein by reference. In the case wherein the solidification
process exploits the resolidication of a molten matrix material, suitable matrices
include polyamide hot melt adhesive polymers, Uni-Rez(R) 2642 and Uni-Rez(R) 2665,
which are commercially available from Union Camp Corporation in Savannah, Ga, and
polyester polymers, Vitel(R) 1870 and Vitel(R) 3300, which are commercial available
from Shell Chemical Co in Arkon, Ohio. These materials have been disclosed by Mathias
US 5,346,558 in traditional solderable anisotropically conductive compositions and
methods for using the same. One proviso applied to the adhesive system is that it
is either compatible with a commercially available ferrofluid or else is capable of
acting as a carrier for the suitably treated magnetically polarizable particles which
are used in the making of a ferrofluid. The monomer composition may be curable by
free radical, anaerobic, photoactivated, air-activated, heat-activated, moisture-activated,
instant or other cure systems such as the addition of hardeners to resins. One cure
system may be utilized in the A-stage or primary solidification, and a second cure
system may be utilized in the B-stage.
[0050] The monomer composition may comprise two polymerizable systems, one of which cures
wholly or partially in the A-stage or primary solidification, and the second of which
cures in the B-stage (accompanied by further curing of the first system, if appropriate).
A hybrid monomer, for example an epoxy acrylate, may be used.
[0051] The electrically-conductive particles may be magnetic; although the magnetic field
will be applied directly to such particles, the presence of the ferrofluid contributes
to a more structured pattern of aligned magnetic electrically-conductive particles
than would be achieved if the particles were dispersed in a composition without the
ferrofluid.
[0052] However it is a preferred feature of the present invention that the electrically-conductive
particles should be substantially non-magnetic.
[0053] The term "non-magnetic" as used herein means that each particle has no significant
net magnetic dipole. A particle with a non-magnetic core may have a coating of a metal
(such as nickel) which is ferromagnetic in nature but in view of the small volume
of the coating the net magnetic moment per unit volume of the particle is not significant.
The substantially non-magnetic particles do not respond to magnetic fields in environments
which themselves are not susceptible to magnetic fields, for example a non-ferromagnetic
liquid medium.
[0054] The electrically-conductive particles may suitably have a size in the range 1-300
micrometres. Spherical particles are preferred but other spheroidal shapes, elongated
shapes, cylindrical shapes, regular shapes such as cubic, or fibrous structures may
also be used. For spherical particles a diameter in the range 2-100 micrometres, more
particularly 2-50 micrometres, especially 5-30 micrometres and more especially 5-20
micrometres, is preferred, while for particles having a major dimension and a minor
dimension the major dimension is preferably in the range 2-300 micrometres and the
minor dimension is preferably in the range 2-100 micrometres, particularly 2-50 micrometres,
especially 5-30 micrometres, and more especially 5-20 micrometres the aspect ratio
preferably being in the range 15/1 to 1/1, more preferably 10/1 to 1/1. In the case
of fibrous structures an aspect ratio of up to 50/1 may be acceptable but fibres are
less preferred because of the danger of cross-contact causing incorrect interconnection
between conductors, particularly in a thin layer of composition. Suitable particles
may have a non-magnetic non-conductive core, for example of plastics material such
as polystyrene, or of glass, coated with an electrically -conductive metal such as
nickel, silver or gold. A core of conductive material such as graphite or a metal
may be used. The core may optionally be hollow. Particles of carbon fibre or solder
may also be used.
[0055] US Patent 5 346 558 Mathias describes solder powder whose particle size is less than
37 micrometres and preferably less than 15 micrometres. WO 93/1248 Emori
et al describes a superfine solder powder, average diameter 10 micrometres available from
Nippon Atomizer.
[0056] The electrically-conductive particles form electrically -conducting inclusions in
the ferrofluid composition which is an insulator. Application of a magnetic field
to the ferrofluid composition causes interactions between the colloidal ferromagnetic
particles and the non-magnetic conductive particles so that they are mutually stabilized
in a non-random structural pattern (with chain formation where the appropriate dimension
of a layer of the composition so permits) due to attractive interactions between particles
and repulsive interaction between chains. In effect there is a driving force to move
the conductive elements relative to the insulating elements so that the two systems
are in mutually exclusive zones (see Skjeltorp, Physical Review Letters, Op.cit.).
[0057] The concentration of electrically-conductive particles in the composition is chosen
according to the desired spacing between those particles in the ordered array and
other factors. With spherical particles of about 2 micrometres diameter, a concentration
in a monolayer of 10
7 particles per square centimetre may be suitable. A qualitative concentration in the
range 0.5 - 60%, by weight of the composition may also be suitable. See also U.S.
Patent 5 366 140 Koskenmaki et al., the contents of which are incorporated herein
by reference, particularly at column 2 lines 24 to 28, which quotes average densities
of about 600 - 6,000,000 microbeads/cm
2, most preferably 160,000 - 6,000,000 beads/cm
2. Optimum concentrations of conductive particles depend upon a number of factors that
can be determined by those skilled in the art through simple experimentation and/or
mathematical calculations. Skjeltorp (U.S. Patent 4,846 988) notes that the concentration
of magnetic holes in ferrofluids polarized with a magnetic field, determines the distance
between them. Shiozawa et. al. (1st International Conference on Adhesive Joining Technology
in Electronics Manufacturing, Berlin, November 1994) indicates that contact resistance
in traditional anisotropically conductive adhesives decreases as particle count (per
unit area) increases. The larger the number of conductive particles, the greater the
current carrying capacity. The current carrying capabilities are not only concentration
dependent but also particle type dependent (Lyons and Dahringer in "Handbook of Adhesives
Technology, Pizzi and Mittal (eds), Marcel Dekker Inc 1994, p.578).
[0058] Thus the actual concentration of conductive particles will depend on the particle
type, density, diameter, electrical pattern, minimum required contact resistance measurements,
the spacing between opposing and adjacent conductors, the surface area of the conductors,
etc.
[0059] Li and Morris (1st International Conference on Adhesive Joining Technology in Electronics
Manufacturing, Berlin, November 1994) have developed computer programs that calculate
the minimum pad size for different loading densities and the minimum pad space for
different particle sizes of conductive particles in conductive adhesives. The magnetic
field may be applied by a permanent magnet or by electromagnetic means. A preferred
magnetic field is in the range 10mT to 1000mT, more preferably 10mT to 100mT, applied
for a time in the range 0.1 to 10 minutes, more preferably 0.5 to 5 minutes.
[0060] The film or coating according to the invention is intended for use in electrical
interconnection of active and/or passive electronic components, for example chip-on-board,
chip-on-flex, chip-on-glass and board/flex and flex/glass. The invention is particularly
suited for interconnection of fine-pitch sets of conductors and for "flip-chip" technology.
Brief Description of Drawings
[0061] Embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example. Certain examples
are supported by drawings. In the drawings:
[0062] Figure 1 is an image analysis (20 optical fields, 100X magnification) of photocured
ferrofluid film containing gold-coated polystyrene spheres of 11 micrometre diameter
(Example 1). The figure shows the field measure of area percent covered by particles,
against field numbers.
[0063] Figure 2 is a corresponding image analysis of the film of Figure 1 for the field
measure of density of the particles in 1/mm
2 (X 1,000), against field numbers.
[0064] Figure 3 is a corresponding image analysis of the film of Figure 1 for characterization
of aggregation of the particles by area measure of sample area (%) against size in
micrometres.
[0065] Figure 4(a) is a diagram (side view) of apparatus for carrying out the coating method
of Example 2.
[0066] Figure 4(b) is a top view diagram of the apparatus of Figure 4(a).
[0067] Figure 5 is an optical photomicrograph of the coating of Example 2 at X 100 magnification.
Transmission Field : approx 730 X 490 micrometres. Particles approximately 10 micrometres
in diameter.
[0068] Figure 6 is an optical photomicrograph similar to Figure 5 of a coating prepared
without the exposure to a magnetic field (comparative).
[0069] Figure 7 is a magnetization curve as described in Example 3.
[0070] Figure 8 is a viscosity-temperature profile as described in Example 3, viscosity
being measured in centipoise (Nm
-2s x 10
3).
[0071] Figure 9(a) is a diagram in side elevation of an apparatus designed and built to
produce films having anisotropic conductive pathways.
[0072] Figure 9(b) is a diagram in elevation of the apparatus of Figure 9(a), taken on the
line A-A in Figure 9(a).
[0073] Figure 10 shows an array of squares with 100 micrometre sides and separated by 25
micrometres superimposed on an optical photomicrograph of an A-staged free standing
film containing 11.5 micrometre gold-coated polystyrene spheres (film prepared according
to the method described in Example 5 using the formulation described in Example 7).
The particles were ordered with a magnetic field prior to the photocuring step. In
this Figure grey tones in the background have been reduced for clarity. The array
of squares is computer-generated and is superimposed on the micrograph in the computer.
[0074] Figure 11 is an optical photomicrograph depicting the same sample as decribed in
Figure 10 without the square array superimposed in the image. Grey tones have not
been altered (cf Figure 10).
EXAMPLE 1
[0075] Magnetite particles of average particle diameter 9.7 nanometres, (Liquids Research
Limited, Unit 3, Mentech, Deiniol Road, Bangor, Gwynedd, U.K.) were coated with oleic
acid and dispersed in heptane at an appropriate content (3.5% and 8.4%) by volume
magnetite to produce fluids with magnetizable saturation of 100G and 250G as described
below. Five millilitres of the above mentioned heptane-based material was added to
5ml of butane diol dimethacrylate and a further 2ml of a secondary surfactant was
added which was an acid form of an aromatic phosphate ester sold under the Trade Mark
GAFAC RE610 by GAF (Great Britain) Limited and now available as RHODAFAC RE610 = GAFAC
RE610 from Rhone Poulenc Chimie, France. This is described as nonoxynol-9-phosphate.
[0076] A good quality ferrofluid resulted with good stability. Fluids with magnetizable
saturation of 100 G and 250 G were thus prepared. The saturation magnetization curve
was steep and typical of superparamagnetic systems in that it exhibited no hysteresis.
These fluids, even when formulated with radical initiators, were stable for periods
of one year at room temperature when stored in air permeable polyethylene bottles
such as those used for the storage of traditional anaerobic adhesives by those skilled
in the art.
[0077] The butane diol dimethacrylate ferrofluids could be polymerized in the bulk with
standard radical photo and/or thermal initiator systems.
[0078] To the butane diol dimethacrylate based ferrofluid of 100 G was added 10% weight/weight
spherical gold-plated cross-linked polystyrene microparticles of 11 micrometre diameter
and 6% w/w of photoinitiator 2,2-dimethoxy-2-phenyl acetophenone.
[0079] The said particles are essentially monodisperse (i.e. of substantially uniform shape
and diameter) and are an article of commerce from Sekisui Fine Chemical Co Ltd, Osaka,
Japan.
[0080] The particle loaded, photocurable ferrofluid adhesive composition was applied to
a rigid, elongated substrate and a flexible or rigid release layer was placed on top
to form a trilayer structure. When the upper layer was flexible, a further rigid substrate
was placed on top to ensure flatness and that a uniform pressure was applied across
the multilayer structure.
[0081] The multilayer structure was placed in the centre of a Halbach magnetic cylinder
(Magnetic Solutions Ltd, Dublin, Ireland). The cylinder had a central bore of 28mm
and was 63mm in length and delivered a uniform magnetic field of 0.26T which was applied
normally to the substrate (multilayer). After approximately one minute the multilayer
was withdrawn and photocured for approximately 90 seconds with an EFOS Ultracure 100
SS UV lamp. The release layer was cleanly separated to leave a supported, cured coating
with uniformly aligned conductive particles locked in place. In this way film section
with high quality particle ordering could easily be achieved over areas greater than
square centimetres. The quality of the ordering was assessed with an Optical Image
Analyzer (Buehler Omnimet 3 Image
[0082] Analyzer, Illinois, USA). Figure 1 illustrates the area percent coverage over 20
optical fields, the standard deviation over 20 fields was 0.806%.
[0083] The results in Figure 1 are summarized as follows:
Minimum |
14.993% |
Maximum |
18.038% |
Mean |
16.354% |
Standard Deviation |
0.806% |
Field Area |
100728.594 micrometres2 |
Total Area |
2.015 e+06 micrometres2 |
Field Count |
20 |
[0084] Figure 2 illustrates the density of particles distributed in the cured field over
twenty randomly selected fields - the data indicate a mean of approximately 5668 particles
per square millimeter.
[0085] The results in Figure 2 are summarized as follows:
Minimum |
5291.447 l/mm2 |
Maximum |
6006.239 l/mm2 |
Mean |
5667.706 l/mm2 |
Standard Deviation |
240.559 l/mm2 |
Field Area |
0.101 l/mm2 |
Total Area |
2.015 mm2 |
Field Count |
20 |
[0086] A computer routine was written to identify the incidence of particle/particle interaction
in the optical image so that any visual 'objects' of size substantially greater than
the 11 micrometre diameter would be recorded and characterized as aggregates - the
size of an aggregate being a multiple of this 11 micrometre diameter plus a small
margin for geometric error. Thus the less than 13 micrometre size category can only
capture single particle objects (nominally 11 micrometres), the 13-26 micrometre category
can only capture dimers, or two particle aggregates (theoretically 22 micrometre maximum
end to end length), and so forth for an optical field comprising a particle filled
layer of monolayer thickness with respect to sphere diameter. Figure 3 illustrates
the data generated after examination of twenty randomly selected optical fields for
the ordered, cured film.
[0087] The results in Figure 3 are summarized as follows:
6.5 - 13 micrometres |
14.281% |
13 - 26 micrometres |
0.067% |
26 - 39 micrometres |
0.015% |
39 - 52 micrometres |
0% |
52 - 65 micrometres |
0% |
65 - 78 micrometres |
0% |
778 micrometres |
0% |
Total Area |
2.015 e + 06 micrometres2 |
Field Count |
20 |
[0088] It can be seen that 99.5% of the area analyzed was in the form of discrete single
particles and the remaining 0.5% occurred in dimeric form only. The twenty optical
fields analyzed were typical of the larger ordered regions of the macroscopic sample.
Twenty fields at 100X magnification corresponded to a total area of approximately
2 square milimetres and hence an average of 11336 particles from Figure 2. Thus approximately
56 particles (0.5%) were not discrete or single particles in this experiment but were
actually in dimeric form, that is, only 28 particles were paired in the entire area.
Pairing of particles to this extent was probably due to inadequate wetting of these
specific particles.
EXAMPLE 2
[0089] (a) In order to demonstrate the
in situ ordering of magnetic holes in a ferrofluid coating, the following experiment was
conducted. A DEK 245 high performance multipurpose screen printer was modified in
such a way that a substantially uniform magnetic field could be applied to a specific
area of an overlying substrate, such that the direction of the magnetic field was
orthogonal to the substrate and the so-called 'worktable' of the printer (DEK Printing
Machines LTD, Dorset, England). As shown in Figure 4 the conventional worktable of
the DEK 245 was replaced with a custom-built worktable which comprised a polished
aluminium surface plate (320mm X 240mm) (1) with a central milled depression (2) sufficient
to accommodate a standard glass microscope slide (approximately 76mm X 25mm) (3).
[0090] The polished plate was mounted over an array of flat permanent magnets arranged so
that a stripe of magnetic material (4) some 170mm long by 50mm wide lay directly beneath
the milled depression in the plate, the said depression being located approximately
70mm from the squeegee (5) end of the stripe so that a magnetic field was developed
in advance of the substrate (slide 3) with respect to the direction of print, the
direction of print being that which moves squeegee blade (5) from left of Figure 4
(A end) to the right of the Figure (B end). The magnetic stripe was constructed from
a series of flat ferrite magnets each 40mm X 25mm X 8mm (length X width X depth).
These were poled across their thickness and collectively delivered approximately 400
Oe field strength, measured directly on the surface of the overlying polished plate.
Each magnet had its flat face parallel to the face of polished worktable top plate
(1) and was arranged so that the long dimension of each magnet was parallel to the
long axis of the top plate. Flanking the central magnetic stripe on either side, were
two similar stripes poled in the opposite direction to the central stripe. All three
stripes were bonded together to complete a magnetic circuit with vertical flux lines
rising up through the substrate coincident with the milled depression (2) in the top
plate (1).
[0091] In comparative experiments where no magnetic field was required, the same polished
top plate was used, but the array of underlying magnets was temporarily removed.
[0092] A particle-filled ferrofluid formulation was prepared based on a commercially available
ferrofluid having a 1500 cps (1.5Nm
-2s) viscosity (APG 057 available from Ferrofluids, Inc, NH, USA) and 10 weight percent
of transparent 11 micrometre cross-linked polystyrene spheres (Sekisui Fine Chemical
Co., Osaka, Japan). The spheres were thoroughly dispersed in the formulation by vigorous
mixing. The formulation was applied to the magnetic worktable (1) in a 20 mm stripe
positioned about 20 mm in advance of the milled depression (2) which now contained
a standard laboratory microscope slide (3). The worktable was raised to a position
that would enable the printing of a thin coating of ferrofluid. The worktable position,
printing speed, printing pressure, and squeegee type were adjusted in independent
experiments to optimize coating for the particular formulation under consideration.
The motorized squeegee blade pulled the formulation across the length of the microscope
slide. During this coating action the filled fluid experienced a magnetic field. After
the printing cycle the squeegee blade lifted free from the worktable surface and reverted
to its original position in readiness for another operation.
[0093] The coated substrate (3) was examined optically using a microscope connected to an
optical image analyzer. The latter equipment is capable of processing the image and
assessing the quality of the field-induced ordering of particles in the ferrofluid.
The particles order in the ferrofluid coating because they act as magnetic holes in
the fluid matrix. The phenomenon of magnetic holes has been described by Skjeltorp
(see for example "One and Two Dimensional Crystallization of Magnetic Holes" in Physical
Review Letter, 51(25), 2306, 1983) in fluid films which are confined in a cavity formed
by two rigid substrates. In this case, the coating was unconfined.
[0094] Image analysis of the coated substrate indicated that a substantially uniform film
with discrete particles dispersed therein resulted as illustrated in Figure 5.
[0095] A comparative experiment was conducted using the above mentioned formulation and
methodology except that the array of magnets was removed from the underside of the
worktable. The results of this experiment are indicated in Figure 6 and clearly show
that the particles are not uniformly dispersed nor isolated as discrete particle entities.
[0096] Although this Example was carried out using a non-curable ferrofluid composition
and non-conductive particles, the Example illustrates the method which can be used
in drawing down a coating in accordance with the invention, as described elsewhere
herein.
[0097] (b) In order to demonstrate the effect with polymer-based systems, epoxy-novolac
ferrofluid solutions were developed. These essentially comprised resinous materials
dissolved in volatile ferrofluids derived from methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) and toluene.
Ferrofluid solvents having saturizable magnetisation (M
S) values of 112 and 166 G in MEK and toluene respectively were prepared. These were
used to dissolve epoxy-novolac DEN 438 EK85 (Dow Deutschland, Werk Rheinmuenster)
and bisphenol F epoxy monomers at an overall concentration of 20 w/w. The relative
percentage weight of each constituent and curatives are listed below. The concentration,
M
S, and viscosity of these solutions could be adjusted by solvent evaporation.
Epoxy Bisphenol F Dow, US |
78% |
DEN 438 EK85 (in ferrofluid solvent) |
13.9% |
DICY (Dicyandiamide) |
7.0% |
BDMA (benzyl dimethylamine) |
1.0% |
[0098] Conductive particles of 25 micrometre diameter were loaded at 10% w/w into the abovementioned
casting solutions and drawn down onto conductive substrates such as copper or gold
clad FR4 boards. The boards were taped in place on an ACCU-LAB
TM draw down coater (Industry-Tech., Oldsmar, Florida) and the formulation was drawn
down with Meyer rod to give a wet thickness of approximately 40 micrometres. The coated
substrate was placed into a Halbach magnetic cylinder with the uniform field of 0.6
Tesla disposed normally to the sample plane. Poling was conducted when the film was
still wet and solvent evaporation proceeded while the sample remained in the magnetic
field until a tacky film was obtained. This was examined under the optical microscope
and particle ordering was confirmed. The film was subsequently dried by warming at
80°C for several hours (A-stage drying). Copper substrates were placed onto the dry
films and were bonded by heating under pressure at 180°C for approximately 30 minutes
(B-stage). Whereas the above-mentioned formulations form a film that was too brittle
to remove from the substrate even when release-coated, the Example nonetheless illustrates
the method of locking particles in a polymeric matrix which is solidifiable by solvent
evaporation (A-stage) and cross-linkable subsequently (B-stage).
EXAMPLE 3
[0099] An epoxy based formulation was prepared based on the following composition:
COMPONENT |
COMMERCIAL NAME/SUPPLIER |
WEIGHT % |
Triglycidyl Aliphatic Ether Resin |
HELOXY 5048 (Shell Chemicals) |
38% |
Cycloaliphatic Epoxy Resin |
CYRACURE UVR6351(Union Carbide) |
10% |
Bisphenol A Diglycidyl Ether Polymer |
ARALDITE 6010 (Ciba) |
50% |
Thermal and/or Photoinitiator 1 |
IRGACURE 261 (Ciba) |
2% * |
Photoinitiator 2 |
GE1014 (General Electric) |
2% * |
* In both cases the initiators were as 50% solutions in propylene carbonate. Therefore
2% above refers to 1% actual initiator (i.e. a 50% solution). |
[0100] A liquid film of said composition photocured in an 'A' stage (primary cure) after
2 X 60 second exposures (one per side), yielded a supple solid film. This film could
be transferred to a metal lapshear and an adhesive bond formed by overlapping with
a further metal lapshear. When this 'sandwich' structure was clamped and heated to
approximately 115°C for 30 minutes, the metal lapshear specimens were strongly bonded
(secondary cure).
[0101] The composition described above was rendered into a ferrofluid by the addition of
precoated magnetite using techniques known to those skilled in the ferrofluid art
and alluded to in Example 1 of the application and also in the parent application.
The magnetization curve for the epoxy ferrofluid is shown in Figure 7. The magnetization
saturation for this fluid was 97 gauss. The viscosity-temperature profile for this
fluid (designated) LOC 22 is illustrated in Figure 8.
[0102] The viscosity of the Ferrofluid was further modified by dilution with 10% of the
CYRACURE UVR6351 cycloaliphatic epoxy resin. A thin liquid film of this composition
could be photocured to form a supple film as noted previously. However the ferrofluidized
version had increased exposure times (2.5 minutes per side), even with increased levels
of the photoinitiators.
[0103] To the liquid epoxy ferrofluid composition was added 15% (w/w) 11.5 micrometre gold-coated
polymer monospheres available from SEKISUI KK, Osaka, Japan.
[0104] Using this conductive particle loaded composition, a thin liquid film was prepared
on two conductive substrates i.e. ITO coated glass and copper foil. In both cases,
a transparent polyester film was placed on top of the liquid film. A further rigid
substrate was placed on top of the polyester and pressure was applied by hand to squeeze
the liquid film into position prior to poling in a uniform magnetic field of 0.6 Tesla
in strength (applied normally to the substrate plane). Poling was conducted for a
period of 1 to 5 minutes. Magnetic aligning times could be reduced by gently heating
the sample prior to ordering. There is a pronounced drop in viscosity in the ferrofluid
composition as a function of temperature. (Figure 8).
[0105] Following magnetic ordering (poling), films were subsequently UV irradiated to induce
an A-stage (primary) cure. After photocure the backing polyester film was removed
to expose the conductive particle-loaded primary-cured epoxy solid coating on a conductive
substrate. A further conductive substrate was then clamped onto the aligned conductive
coating and measurements of contact resistance were recorded in the Z axis using the
four point probe method and a GEN-RAD 1689 PRECISION DIGIBRIDGE. Contact resistances
ranging from 40 to 100 milliohms were recorded for copper bonded to ITO (indium tin
oxide).
[0106] The primary cured film, sandwiched between conductive substrates was subsequently
subjected to a B-stage (secondary) heat cure (110°C for 30 minutes). The substrates
were strongly bonded and Z axis contact resistance data was typically 50 milliohms
for copper bonded to ITO (indium tin oxide).
EXAMPLE 4
[0107] As already described, adhesives derived from coatings or films can be made by B-staging
a pre-cast material. In such cases, the primary solidification, or A-stage, may result
from solvent evaporation and/or partially induced thermal cure. The A-stage, which
has the function of locking conductor particle arrays in place, may equally be performed
by chemical reactions which cause partial gelling at temperatures which are nevertheless
well below the thermal threshold temperature required to trigger latent polymerisation
catalysts used to activate subsequent B-stages, e.g. <120°C in the case of dicyandiamide
(DICY). An example of a system that operates at room temperature involves reaction
between multi-functional isocyanates and polyols to yield a polyurethane. The ferrofluid
content of such a formulation may be derived from a ferrofluid polyol, a ferrofluid
isocyanate or from some other monomeric system which does not enter into polyurethane
formation but is present to provide subsequent heat cure, eg, ferrofluid epoxy or
acrylic monomers. The formulation below has been used to order conductive particles
and lock them in place by chemical reactions (polyurethane formation) at room temperature
which were unassisted by light:
Hexamethylene Disocyanate |
1.1g |
Hydroxy Ethyl Methacrylate (HEMA) |
0.7g |
Ferrofluid - Butane Diol Diglycidyl Ether (MS = 343 G) |
1.47g |
DICY |
0.07g |
Benzyl Dimethylamine |
0.015g25 |
micrometre Au coated polystyrene spheres |
0.1g |
[0108] Systems derived from ferrofluid versions of HEMA (M
S = 115 G; viscosity at 27°C = 5.5 cPs---0.0055 Nm
-2s) were also prepared. The HEMA based ferrofluid is however unstable.
[0109] An alternative approach to locking particles in ordered arrays in ferrofluid adhesives
involves photochemistry. Thus the A-stage can be a photoinduced cationic or radical
cure. Formulations which respond in this way may only partially cure with light, or
may comprise two different types of reacting system which act independently (in the
same or in different monomers). In the former cases a mixed cycloaliphatic and non-cycloaliphatic
system may be partially cured with photocationic initiators and subsequently thermally
cured in a B-stage process. In the latter case, a mixed acrylic-epoxy system may be
designed and a photoinduced radical cure used to act on the acrylic functionalities
to lock ordered conductor arrays in place. Examples which follow describe these approaches
in detail.
EXAMPLE 5
[0110] In order to produce high quality anisotropically conductive adhesives or films (ACAs
or ACFs respectively) it was necessary to design specialised formulations and specialised
equipment. The film making equipment is illustrated in Figure 9 and provides films
up to approximately 20 square centimeters in area, although the test pieces routinely
used were approximately 7.5 square centimeters in area. This example describes in
detail the apparatus used to produce films and the processing steps involved.
[0111] As shown in Figure 9, carriage 10 which is a flat platform constructed from polished
non magnetic steel is used to hold the sample. The carriage comprises a vacuum chuck
to hold a substrate in place as well as a cartridge heater capable of raising the
platform temperature to approximately 100°C, and a thermocouple for temperature sensing.
The carriage is mounted on a Tufnal base to prevent any thermal transfer to the substructure
on which it rests. The carriage rides on single track 11, again constructed from non
magnetic material. The arrangement is such that the mounted carriage assembly can
be moved to specific positions from the leftmost side of the apparatus to the right.
On so doing it can be passed into the central plane of large magnetic (Halbach) cylinder
17. When processing is finished, the carriage can be retracted and moved from the
right of the apparatus to the left.
[0112] The ferrofluid adhesive formulation containing a plurality of conductors is applied
to a release coated substrate mounted on top of carriage 10. The said substrate is
flat and may be reflective. A similarly treated substrate is placed over the top of
the ferrofluid adhesive film. This substrate is UV transmissive
[0113] When the ferrofluid adhesive composition comprising a plurality of conductors is
confined by the two substrates the disposition of the conductive particles is initially
random in three dimensions. The confined fluid is brought and locked into position
in the next step of the film making process. If initial film assembly is considered
step 1 of the process, the second step may be described as 'wet film thickness determination'.
In this second step, the assembled film is compressed by apparatus identified by numerals
12 - 14 in Figure 9. The object of this compression stage is to produce a homogeneous
fluid film occupying the entire area of the confining top substrate with excessive
liquid being squeezed out around the entire periphery of the top substrate. Not only
does the compression achieve a substantially uniform fluid film, but pressure is applied
which produces a fluid layer between the substrates such that the liquid layer is
less than two conductive particle diameters in thickness. This situation is referred
to as a monolayer of conductive particles. The fluid film is however thicker than
a particle diameter so that the individual particles are free to move in the XY plane
of the sample.
[0114] The hardware used in this second stage comprises an air driven cylinder 12 capable
of delivering a continuously variable pressure up to 20 Kgs per square centimeter,
a pressure measuring device 13 and a specially designed cube 14 which eventually applies
pressure to the film assembly. Cube 14 is open on one of its vertical faces to allow
optical access for a UV beam. At a position corresponding approximately to the cube
diagonal a high quality mirror 15, tuned to optimise UV reflection, is mounted at
an angle of 45 degrees or less to deflect light downwards towards the underlying sample.
The bottom face of the cube, ie, that which is parallel to the sample plane, is a
high quality fused silica optical flat 1 centimeter in thickness and approximately
5 centimeters on each side. This component is flat to λ /4 or better over 25 square
millimeters measured at the green Ar ion laser line. The optical window in the cube
base created by this component after mounting onto the cube assembly is 3 centimeters
X 3 centimeters. The optical flat sits proud from the base of the cube framework and
hence applies pressure across an area up to 5 centimeters X 5 centimeters. The entire
assembly attached to the cylinder 12 can be made appear weightless by differential
pressure control to the cylinder regulated through precision controls in box 18. These
controls also enable extremely gentle touch down of the assembly onto the sample below.
Control box 18 further comprises heater control and feedback for the carriage cartridge
heater. The remaining sides of the cube framework are polished metal optionally fitted
with heat sinks on their outer surfaces. A heat sink may also be bonded to the rear
side of the mirror within the cube to remove any heat generated by the lamp.
[0115] To generate a wet film having a thickness of approximately one conductive particle
diameter, the pressure controls are regulated to compress the film assembly. This
requires pressures typically in the order of a few Kgs per square centimeter. The
pressure is then removed and the film remains essentially at the compressed thickness.
The carriage 10 bearing the compressed film is then inspected in step 3. Inspection
is conducted with reflective mode microscope 16 usually operating at 200X magnification.
The length of the film can be scanned. The image is relayed to a monitor by a video
camera attached to the trinocular head of the microscope. When the operator is satisfied
that the film is a monolayer with respect to thickness, the assembly can be sent to
the next process step. If the film is not a monolayer, it may be sent back a step
and recompressed under different conditions until a satisfactory result is observed.
Once in monolayer configuration, the film is advanced into the poling gate 17 which
comprises a large Halbach magnetic cylinder with a circular aperture of approximately
55 millimeters and a length of approximately 140 millimeters. This permanent magnet
has been designed and constructed to deliver a substantially uniform magnetic field
over the vast-majority of its length. The Halbach cylinder delivers a field of 0.6
T, the orientation of which may be controlled by rotating it in its cup shaped housing.
The strength of the magnetic field was selected to substantially saturate the ferrofluid
compositions employed. To achieve a uniform dispersion of conductive particles such
as that depicted in Figure 5, the field will be applied normal to the sample. It has
however been found helpful to achieve very high degrees of order to first pole the
sample with the field direction parallel to the sample then subsequently redirect
the field to a position normal to the sample. The period required for poling depends
on a number of parameters such as the composition of the fluid with regard to magnetisable
material, magnetisation saturation of the fluid at the specific field applied, the
viscosity of the formulation, the temperature of the sample, etc.. The sample temperature
can be regulated by heating the mounting platform 10.
[0116] After the fourth step of poling, the sample is retracted from the magnet and reinspected
to check for conductor particle ordering. If ordering is not satisfactory, the sample
may be re-poled. At this fifth stage or at the third inspection stage, the video camera
output may be connected to an optical image analyser which provides quality control
of the ordering process. The ordered fluid film is next retracted in step six back
to the compression position. The ordered sample may be photocured at this point with
or without pressure applied to the liquid film. In this process the sample is illuminated
with UV light, item 19 in Figure 9, to induce photocure and lock the arrayed conductors
in place. An Oriel 1 kW XeHg arc lamp (LOT ORIEL, Leatherhead, Surrey, UK) with a
50 millimeter beam diameter and fitted with a dichroic mirror and electronic shutter
was built into the film making fixture and used to partially cure, or A-stage, the
ACFs. Following UV irradiation, the pressure, if applied, was released from the assembly
and the cured film was carefully released from the substrates. The central section
of the thus produced ACF, which was approximately 7.5 square centimeters in area,
was used for physical testing.
[0117] Following cleaning or replacement of substrates, the operation could be repeated.
The apparatus was designed to accommodate different types and sizes of conductor particles
and different viscosity formulations. Process parameters could thus be obtained for
continuous film making equipment.
EXAMPLE 6
[0118] A typical formulation designed for the abovementioned processing equipment is described
in the current example. Formulations must be designed, thus:
a) to produce an A-staged film, i.e., a solidifable form which may be handled in a
supported or unsupported form. The A-staged film may be used in a thermoplastic system.
b) to produce a further cure stage or B-stage, if a thermoset is required, which is
activated by the end user to cause adhesion between substrates to be bonded together.
c) to be capable of ordering "magnetic holes" in its fluid state, for example through
the use of magnetisable fluids; this requires careful consideration of fluid viscosity
and/or its relationship with temperature or shear forces for example.
d) to comprise conductors of regular geometry which provide conductive pathways between
the conductive pads on one substrate and the conductive tracks or pads on another.
[0119] For the purposes of this example and the apparatus detailed in Example 5, the A-stage
is effected by photocure. However the use of heat, E-beam cure, solvent evaporation,
cooling, in particular from a melt, chemical reaction, physical association phenomena,
etc., are also valid means of effecting viscosity increases to an effectively solid
A-staged condition which is used to lock arrays in place following ordering in an
initial fluid state.
[0120] When photocure is used, it may be preferable to design a formulation such that the
photocure mechanism is specific to certain formulation components and ineffective
towards others. Thus, for example, an epoxy acrylate combination may be photocured
by photolysis of a radical photoinitiator, such as benzophenone. In this case the
acrylate functions are susceptible to cure whereas the epoxy functions are not. This
scheme is preferable to a hybrid all epoxy formulation comprising a mixture of cycloaliphatic
epoxies and bisphenol A type epoxies for example (cf. Example 3). In the latter case,
cycloaliphatic epoxies are more susceptible to cationically induced photocure than
the bisphenol A type epoxies, so that an A-stage can be effected. However, because
the hybrid formulation comprises epoxies only, no clear distinction can be made and
a proportion of bisphenol A epoxies, destined to subsequently cure in a B-stage, may
undesirably cure during the A-stage. If this happens the ultimate strengths achievable
after B-staging may be adversely affected.
[0121] In order to achieve extremely high degrees of ordering of conductors in the ferrofluid
version of the adhesive formulations, it is preferable that the viscosity be less
than 1500cPs (1.5Nm
-2s) and most preferably less than a few hundred cPs or less at the poling operation
temperature. It may also be preferable to ensure that the initial formulation is all
liquid in nature before addition of conductive particles. For example liquid anhydride
hardeners may be used to effect epoxy cure in the B-stage as alternatives to DICY.
The preference for all liquid systems relates to the fact that any included particle
in a ferrofluid formulation behaves as a "magnetic hole" once stimulated by a magnetic
field.
[0122] Thus conventional heterogeneous hardeners for epoxies such as dicyandiamide (DICY)
if used would behave like "magnetic holes". While this is not a problem
per se, and may even be thought of as advantageous with regard to the distribution of curatives
throughout the adhesive, particles of this sort may interweave with the conductor
array and hence produce less than a substantially highly-ordered array of conductive
particles. This however becomes less of a problem if the DICY is of small particle
size, particularly if it is smaller in size than the conductive particles. A disadvantage
of anhydride cured epoxies is cure speed. However it is known to those skilled in
the art, that catalysts accelerate anhydride cure substantially. Suitable catalysts
may be liquids such as benzyl dimethylamine (BDMA) or semi solids such as the HX epoxy
hardener pastes from Asahi Chemical Industry Co. Ltd. An example of a catalysed formulation
suitable for ACFs is described below:
Component |
Supplier |
Description |
Percentage w/w |
Ebecryl Resin 604 |
ucb Chemicals Drogenbos, Belgium |
Acrylated epoxy. |
16.8 |
Dihydrodicyclo Pentadienyl Oxyethyl Methacrylate |
Rohm & Haas, Germany |
Acrylate |
23.6 |
Butane diol diglycidyl ether (BDDGE) |
Aldrich, US |
Epoxy |
15.8 |
Bisphenol F |
Dow, US |
Epoxy |
15.8 |
Nadic Anhydride |
Aldrich, US |
Latent hardener |
21.5 |
Irgacure 1700 |
Ciba-Geigy, UK |
Photoinitiator |
3.0 |
HX3722 |
Ashai, Japan |
Catalyst |
3.9 |
[0123] Such a formulation photocures after 20 seconds irradiation by a medium pressure UV
arc lamp at a film thickness of approximately 25 micrometres. A Si die of 36 mm
2 was placed on top of the photocured (A-staged) film and bonded to a FR4 board with
100 N force and 90 seconds heat treatment at approximately 180°C. Average die shear
forces of around 450 N were recorded for this size of die.
[0124] A version of the above formulation was built up by mixing ferrofluid adhesive monomers
with standard monomers as outlined below:
Reference Number |
Component |
Percent w/w |
1 |
FF* - Ebecryl Resin 604 |
7.3 |
2 |
FF - Dihydrodicyclo Pentadienyl Oxyethyl Methacrylate |
3.0 |
3 |
FF - Bisphenol F |
14.8 |
4 |
Butane diol diglycidyl ether (BDDGE) |
15.0 |
5 |
Ebecryl Resin 604 |
9.5 |
6 |
Dihydrodicyclo Pentadienyl Oxyethyl Methacrylate |
19.5 |
7 |
Nadic Anhydride |
24.5 |
8 |
Irgacure 1700 |
3.0 |
9 |
HX3722 |
3.5 |
FF* refers to ferrofluid monomers prepared by Liquids Research Limited - see Example
1. |
[0125] This can be performed either by adding two monomers to a third which has already
been converted to a ferrofluid, or using a blend of monomers as a single polymerizable
carrier. In the former case, the production of a typical ferrofluid based upon the
low viscosity monomer Dihydrodicyclo Pentadienyl Oxyethyl Methacrylate (Ref 2 above)
is detailed below.
Heptane intermediate:
[0126] Dissolve 404g of Ferric Nitrate in pure water and make up to 500mls. Dissolve 150g
of Ferrous Sulphate Heptahydrate in water and make up to 500mls. Mix the above solutions
together and add 450mls of ammonia solution (specific gravity 0.88). Add 150 mls of
oleic acid. Acidify the solution and separate the solid magnetite. Wash solids copiously
with water and redisperse in heptane.
[0127] Production of Dihydrodicyclo Pentadienyl Oxyethyl Methacrylate ferrofluid using heptane
stock:
[0128] Precipitate the required amount of heptane fluid and separate the solids. Add 0.3ml/100emu*
of a phosphate ester surfactant such as GAFAC RE610 and 0.3ml/100emu of dispersant
Bykanol-N from Byk-chemie GmbH, D-4230 Wesel, Germany. Add the required amount of
monomer and heat to evaporate the residual solvent.
*emu is "electro magnetic unit" which is an alternative unit for the expression of
magnetic saturisation. 4xPix ferrofluid density converts emu/g to Gauss units.
[0129] The approximate component percentages resulting from the above procedure are:
Dihydrodicyclo Pentadienyl Oxyethyl Methacrylate = 80%
Oleic acid = 5%
Magnetite = 5%
Bykanol-N = < 5%
Phosphate ester = 5%
[0130] The above composition produces a ferrofluid of Dihydrodicyclo Pentadienyl Oxyethyl
Methacrylate with a magnetisation saturation of approximately 100 Gauss. Stronger
fluids require additional loading of magnetite. The ultimate strength of the fully
formulated adhesive composition is determined by dilution of high strength monomeric
ferrofluids which are relatively easy to prepare, with more viscous non-ferrofluid
monomers. The three constituents of the abovementioned formulation, reference numbers
1-3, were derived from a single ferrofluid made up from these components in the appropriate
ratios. A colloidally stable blend resulted with a viscosity at 27°C of 1800 cPs (1.8
Nm
-2s) and an M
S of 135 Gauss.
[0131] The ferrofluid adhesive formulation set out in the abovementioned table was cured
and mechanically tested in the same way as the non-ferrofluid version of the formulation.
Average die shear strengths of approximately 260 N were recorded. Additionally when
the formulation was loaded with 10 % w/w 25 micrometre Au-coated polystyrene spheres
and aligned in a magnetic field, then A- and B-staged according to the invention,
Z-axis contact resistance measurements using the four point probe method recorded
10 m0hms with an upper Cu substrate and a Au-coated FR4 lower substrate.
[0132] To minimise migration or exudation of a surfactant in the ferrofluid adhesive composition,
it may be advantageous to utilise a reactive or polymeric surfactant such as available
from Monomer-Polymer and Dajac Laboratories Inc. Trevose, PA 19047, U.S.A.. (see also
Wu, H.F.
et al., Polymer Composites, 12(4), 281, 199; Rao, A.V.
et al., Paint and Ink International, 15,1995; Holmberg, K, Surface Coatings International,
(12), 481, 1993).
EXAMPLE 7
[0133] In the present example, photochemistry is also used to invoke A-stage cure, however
the constituents of the formulation which are responsive to photocure are derived
from acrylic monomers rather than epoxies. The basic formulation is detailed below:
Reference Number |
Component |
Percent w/w |
1 |
Epoxy-Acrylate resin IRR282, ucb Chemicals, Drogenbos, Belgium |
36.71 |
2 |
Bisphenol F, Dow, US |
10.84 |
3 |
Irgacure 1700, Ciba-Geigy, UK |
3.85 |
4 |
Butane diol diacrylate |
26.92 |
5 |
DICY |
5.24 |
6 |
Benzyl dimethylamine |
0.35 |
7 |
Au-coated spheres, Sekisui KK, Osaka, Japan |
16.08 |
[0134] In order to optimise viscosity and magnetic strength of the formulation, item 1 was
derived from an IRR282 based ferrofluid ( M
S 115 G; viscosity at 27°C of 115 cPs = 0.115Nm
-2s) and 29.86% of item 4 was derived from a butane diol diacrylate based ferrofluid
( M
S 116 G; viscosity at 27°C of 12 cPs = 0.012Nm
-2s). The ferrofluids were prepared by Liquids Research Limited - see Examples 1 and
6. The residual balance of item 4 was derived from pure butane diol diacrylate monomer.
The formulation formed a stable colloid when all ingredients were admixed. The magnetic
strength of the resulting low viscosity formulation was approximately 50G. The gold-coated
spheres were either exclusively 12, or exclusively 25 micrometres in diameter.
[0135] Formulations of this type have been designed to A-stage cure to a handleable solid
form which may be either supported or unsupported. In this case the films were unsupported
or free standing. The system responsive to photocure is acrylic and reacts independently
of the epoxy system, thus forming a network of partially crosslinked polacrylate surrounded
by epoxy moieties which are subsequently reacted in the B-stage. The IRR282 resin,
being a hybrid epoxy acrylate, serves to knit together the interpenetrating network
of acrylic polymer and epoxy polymer after heat activation. Alternatively, the acrylic
film forming resins may bear no hybrid epoxy function so that the two systems remain
entirely independent after polymerisation in the separate cure cycles. Formulations
of the type described in this example, which form a soft film which has unreacted,
meltable epoxy monomers interspersed throughout its structure may be used to form
anisotropically conductive films with a A-stage cured film thickness greater than
the diameter of one conductive filler particle but less than two particle diameters.
Because of the softness of the A-staged film and the fact that the epoxy monomers
may melt and are unreacted at this stage, conductor pads on substrates to be bonded
penetrate through the film until they make contact with the conductive filler particle
which lies slightly below the surface of the A-staged film. This process is encouraged
by the B-stage cure conditions which require the application of pressure at elevated
temperatures which are well in excess of the melting temperatures of the epoxy monomers.
[0136] This formulation was used in conjunction with the apparatus described in Example
5 to produce free standing films comprising ordered arrays of conducting particles,
said films being capable of subsequent heat activation (B-staging) to produce an adhesive
bond. When such films, comprising 25 micrometre gold-coated spheres, were used to
bond copper studs to gold-coated FR4 boards, Z-axis contact resistance measurements
performed using four point probe methodology indicated resistances in the range 16-22
m0hms. When the same formulation was prepared and films produced comprising particles
of identical diameter and core material but with no conductive coating thereon, Z-axis
contact resistance measurements indicated electrical open circuits with resistances
estimated to be in the order of several hundred k0hms or M0hms.
[0137] Silicon die, 36 mm
2 in area, were bonded to bare FR4 boards, using said free standing films and 100N
force applied for 90 seconds with a bondline temperature of approximately 180°C. The
samples were let stand at room temperature before shear testing using an Instron tensile
tester with a specially designed sample holder. Die push off strengths of 150 N were
typical for the above formulation and bonding conditions.
[0138] Figure 10 illustrates an array of squares with 100 micrometre sides, separated by
25 micrometres in both X and Y directions, superimposed on top of an A-staged free
standing film prepared from the formulation in the current example. The array of squares
simulates an array of similarly sized and positioned electrode pads on a Silicon device,
or so-called 'flip chip'device.
[0139] The magnetic hole nature of the particles gives rise to a repulsive force when the
system is poled with a field oriented normally to the sample plane. This causes the
nonmagnetic particles to essentially repel one another and separate which minimises
the potential for cross connections between electrode pads superimposed or brought
into contact with the film. The mottled grey texture in the figure is due to crystals
of DICY (dicyandiamide) embedded in the A staged film. These can be more clearly discerned
in Figure 11. DICY acts as a latent hardener catalyst used to initiate the B-stage
cure reactions of the epoxide components of the formulation. The DICY crystals themselves
will behave as magnetic holes, albeit irregular ones, and their separation by mutual
repulsion, in principle, serves to aid the uniformity of cure through a more uniform
dispersion of the curative. The DICY crystals so dispersed do not interfere adversely
with the distribution of the conductive magnetic hole spheres as can be seen from
Figure 10 in which the square simulated pads are separated by 25 micrometres in each
of the X and Y directions (parallel to the edges of the Figure). DICY may be deployed
in the formulation but be removed from the interstial spaces between conductive magnetic
hole spheres by first coating said spheres with DICY so that the latent hardener occupies
the same position in the formed array as the conductive particle. Heating such a coating
above the melting point will cause it to induce cure in the epoxide and flow from
the conductive particle. Alternatively, liquid latent hardeners may be used to replace
the heterogeneous solid hardeners such as DICY. An example of a latent liquid hardener
which does not interfere with the distribution of conductive particles is nadic anhydride
(Example 8).
[0140] Figure 10 shows no incidence of cross connection between simulated pads arising from
strings or aggregates of particles.
[0141] Whereas the acrylic functions in the formulation serve to generate free standing
handleable films with latent adhesive properties, and the epoxy functions serve to
polymerise during B-stage operations, the dual functional IRR 282 material enters
into both types of reaction and serves to tie the epoxy and acrylic systems together.
EXAMPLE 8
[0142] A formulation similar to that described in Example 7 was prepared according to the
details set out below:
Reference Number |
Component |
Percent w/w |
1 |
FF* - Epoxy-Acrylate resin IRR282, ucb Chemicals, Drogenbos, Belgium |
26.8 |
2 |
Bisphenol F, Dow, US |
12.5 |
3 |
Irgacure 1700, Ciba-Geigy, UK |
4.5 |
4 |
Butane diol diacrylate |
20.4 |
5 |
Nadic Anhydride, Aldrich, UK |
18.36 |
6 |
HX3722 |
2.5 |
7 |
Au coated spheres, Sekisui KK, Osaka, Japan |
15.0 |
FF* refers to ferrofluid monomer prepared by Liquids Research Limited - see Examples
1 and 6. |
[0143] This formulation relies on the liquid latent epoxy curative, Nadic Anhydride. The
formulation had a magnetic strength of approximately 31G. Alignment of conductor particles
was facilitated by gentle heating before photocure. Free standing 25 micrometre films
were produced after 20 seconds of UV irradiation. Si die 36 mm
2 in area were bonded in a B-stage operation on the photocured film which entailed
90 seconds of thermal treatment at 180°C and 100 N force applied to the die with flip-chip
bonding equipment ('Fineplacer', FINETECH electronic, Berlin, Germany). Average die
shear strengths of 140 N were recorded. Electrical measurements in the Z-axis show
the film to have 120 m0hm resistance after B-staging.